Positive integer with exactly two divisors, 1 and itself
POPULARITY
Jake Bhardwaj - the brains behind Not Another Quiz Night, the immersive quiz show turning the traditional pub quiz format on its head - takes on Bush in this week's quiz, Pairs, Paleontology and Prime Numbers. Will he win the quizzing battle on rounds about becoming a dinosaur for 24 hours, getting used to famous pairs reversed, and the British public's favourite number between 1 and 9? Make sure you check out Not Another Quiz Night: https://www.notanotherquiznight.com/ And if you're enjoying quizzing with us, please give us a rating and review, it really helps us grow, build and keep making these silly questions. To play Guestimators every week, go to guestimators.com. For our merch - go to guestimators.store Email us on hello@guestimators.com Voicenotes to 07457404279 And follow our socials: Twitter/X Instagram YouTube TikTok Bluesky Hosts - Andy Bush & Matt Cutler Producer - Will Nichols Music - Adam Harrison Design - Charlie Thomas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's Statman Matt and Producer Will previewing this week's quiz, Pairs, Paleontology and Prime Numbers, and they cover A LOT of ground. Including Andy's Dinosaur Adventures; whether it was PJ or Duncan who got blinded playing paintball in Byker Grove; and why 23 is apparently the most commonly-occuring number in nature. You might learn something. But it's not going to be particularly useful if you do. To play Guestimators every week, go to guestimators.com. And if you're enjoying the show, give us a rating and review, we can't promise it will help you score more points on the quiz, but it will make you feel fuzzy inside. For our merch - go to guestimators.store Email us on hello@guestimators.com Voicenotes to 07457404279 And follow our socials: Twitter/X Instagram YouTube TikTok Hosts - Andy Bush & Matt Cutler Producer - Will Nichols Music - Adam Harrison Design - Charlie Thomas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tue, 19 Nov 2024 14:00:00 GMT http://relay.fm/cortex/161 http://relay.fm/cortex/161 I Fight Prime Numbers 161 CGP Grey and Myke Hurley Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. clean 4916 Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. This episode of Cortex is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code CORTEX. Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. Listen Later: A read-it-later service for your ears. Get $2 in free credit and up to 25% extra credits. Links and Show Notes: Submit Feedback Get 25% Off a New Annual Moretex Subscription – Only Until December 18, 2024 OpenAI's search engine is now live in ChatGPT - The Verge The Assistant by Kagi The Subtle Range – Cortex Brand – Available until November 27 Myke's iPad Pro Home Screen Cortex Brand iPad Pro Home Screen Kindle Colorsoft Kindle Scribe reMarkable Paper Pro Readwise Testing the Vision Pro With New Ultrawide Display Option in visionOS 2.2 - MacRumors Mac mini - Apple Chappell Roan - Wikipedia Endel Portal Croissant App Myke on Mastodon Myke on Threads Myke on Bluesky(Which he joined after recording) Get 25% Off a New Annual Moretex Subscription
Tue, 19 Nov 2024 14:00:00 GMT http://relay.fm/cortex/161 http://relay.fm/cortex/161 CGP Grey and Myke Hurley Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. clean 4916 Grey discusses why Apple Intelligence message suggestions feel ‘anti-human'. Myke shares his current iPad Home Screens. Also, Ask Cortex questions on breaking free from the 7-day week, productivity music, and finding balance on text-based social media. This episode of Cortex is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code CORTEX. Fitbod: Get stronger, faster with a fitness plan that fits you. Get 25% off your membership. Listen Later: A read-it-later service for your ears. Get $2 in free credit and up to 25% extra credits. Links and Show Notes: Submit Feedback Get 25% Off a New Annual Moretex Subscription – Only Until December 18, 2024 OpenAI's search engine is now live in ChatGPT - The Verge The Assistant by Kagi The Subtle Range – Cortex Brand – Available until November 27 Myke's iPad Pro Home Screen Cortex Brand iPad Pro Home Screen Kindle Colorsoft Kindle Scribe reMarkable Paper Pro Readwise Testing the Vision Pro With New Ultrawide Display Option in visionOS 2.2 - MacRumors Mac mini - Apple Chappell Roan - Wikipedia Endel Portal Croissant App Myke on Mastodon Myke on Threads Myke on Bluesky(Which he joined after recording) Get 25% Off a New Annual Moretex Subscrip
MOOBARKFLUFF! Click here to send us a comment or message about the show!Bearly, Taebyn, Rayne, TickTock and Cheetaro gather for another fun filled episode. Taebyn is running late this episode so the regular flow of the show is a little off. But, rest assured, Taebyn brings it all back around when he shows up. We play a little This or That, have muppet mad libs, Cheetaro gives us a wonderful review of the movie Marmaduke, and TickTock fills us in on the latest news in the furry world. Teabyn also discusses the newest prime number discovery! So join us for a rip roaring, rootin' tootin', heck of a good time. Your brain will thank you. Moobarkfluff everyfur!Click Here for the page of prime numbersThis podcast contains adult language and adult topics. It is rated M for Mature. Listener discretion is advised.Support the showThanks to all our listeners and to our staff: Bearly Normal, Rayne Raccoon, Taebyn, Cheetaro, TickTock, and Ziggy the Meme Weasel.You can send us a message on Telegram at BFFT Chat, or via email at: bearlyfurcasting@gmail.com
Abortion was on the ballot in 10 states, and seven of them passed constitutional amendments defending abortion rights. Also, this ginormous number has a whopping 41,024,320 digits, which isn't very helpful for mathematicians but is certainly exciting for math nerds.Seven States Passed Ballot Measures To Protect Abortion RightsThis week, science was on the ballot in many states. Voters across the country weighed in on issues like drug legalization, money to fund climate programs, and, of course, abortion rights. Ten states voted on the issue, and in seven of them, voters chose to protect or expand abortion rights. Those states are Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New York, Colorado, Arizona, and Missouri. On the flip side, voters in Florida, Nebraska, and South Dakota rejected measures that would protect abortion rights.Ira Flatow talks with Tim Revell, executive editor at New Scientist, about the outcome of some sciencey ballot measures and what we can expect going into another Trump presidency. They also discuss the launch of the world's first wooden satellite, what scientists learned when they put vampire bats on a treadmill, and more.Math Enthusiast Finds The Largest Known Prime NumberLet's go back to grade school—do you remember learning about prime numbers? They're numbers that can only be divided by themselves and one.So 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and so on are prime numbers. The number 12, for example, wouldn't be prime because you can divide it by other numbers, like 2 and 3. And as you count up and up, prime numbers become more sparse.Math lovers are always competing to find the largest prime number, and just recently, an engineer discovered the largest one—so far. And you won't believe how ginormous it is: It has more than 41 million digits.Ira talks with Jack Murtagh, math writer and columnist for Scientific American, about why prime numbers are so cool, and the quest to find the largest one.Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
Luke Hess – Detroit, MI USA [DeepLabs / Rekids / Dolly / FXHE / Planet-e / Echocord] Born in 1980 and raised in the Detroit area, Luke Hess has harnessed a deep appreciation for electronic music and the expression of the underground movement. His background in mathematics and engineering has given him a scientific approach to the dance floor, using frequencies, tones, and soundscapes to transform surroundings and mood. His faith based music production has landed him numerous vinyl releases (EP's, LP's, and remixes) on labels like Planet-e, Rekids, FXHE, Echocord, Kontra-Musik, Dolly, Finale Sessions, Ornaments, and Prime Numbers among others. His debut album was released in early May 2009 by Denmark based label Echocord. In 2010 he began his own interpretation of Detroit techno with his Detroit project and record label - DeepLabs. His sophomore album “Keep On” was released on FXHE records in 2012 and received a Recommended 4.5/5 rating on Resident Advisor. With 20 years of DJ experience, he is regarded as a perfectionist behind the decks layering his tracks in a very detailed and hypnotic manner. Luke has played at many notable venues and festivals in Europe, Asia, Australia, and North America including numerous appearances at the illustrious Berghain/Panoramabar in Berlin. Luke's continued hard work in the studio and as a music collector/curator combined with his unyielding interest in technology and sound will no doubt stimulate the boundaries of electronic music. Tracklist via -Spotify: bit.ly/SRonSpotify -Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/Slam_Radio/ -Facebook: bit.ly/SlamRadioGroup Archive on Mixcloud: www.mixcloud.com/slam/ Subscribe to our podcast on -iTunes: apple.co/2RQ1xdh -Amazon Music: amzn.to/2RPYnX3 -Google Podcasts: bit.ly/SRGooglePodcasts -Deezer: bit.ly/SlamRadioDeezer Keep up with SLAM: https://fanlink.tv/Slam Keep up with Soma Records: https://linktr.ee/somarecords For syndication or radio queries: harry@somarecords.com & conor@glowcast.co.uk Slam Radio is produced at www.glowcast.co.uk
There's a new largest known prime number and we speak to all the key players, including the discoverer Luke Durant. Also featured in the podcast are George Woltman from GIMPS, James Grime, and Matt Parker.Extended interviews (as videos) can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLt5AfwLFPxWIWS5Jd3k5QHdc0kxwfnZMgMatt Parker's epic video on Stand-up Maths is here: https://youtu.be/zsyGRDrDfbINumberphile's main video on the discovery is here: https://youtu.be/Yp4ilFOtoegThe GIMPS press release is here: https://www.mersenne.org/primes/?press=M136279841GIMPS: https://www.mersenne.orgMore Numberphile videos on Mersenne Primes from over the year: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLt5AfwLFPxWKsTwVXpLscZdfiiqAkkGCANumberphile is supported by Jane Street - https://www.numberphile.com/jane-streetYou can support Numberphile on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/numberphileHere are our Patrons - https://www.numberphile.com/patrons
In this exciting episode of Breaking Math, we explore the groundbreaking discovery of the largest prime number ever found—M136279841, a Mersenne prime with over 41 million digits! Join [Your Name] as we dive deep into the story behind this astonishing mathematical achievement, led by Luke Durant, a volunteer from the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS) project.Discover how Mersenne primes work, why they're so important to the world of mathematics, and how cutting-edge technology like GPUs has revolutionized the search for these massive numbers. We also discuss the critical role that prime numbers play in cryptography and online security, making this discovery relevant far beyond just the realm of theoretical mathematics.Learn about the global collaborative effort that made this record-breaking discovery possible, and find out how you can join the hunt for the next giant prime! Whether you're a math enthusiast, a tech geek, or just curious about the wonders of numbers, this episode is packed with insights that will inspire you to think about prime numbers in a whole new way.Key Takeaways: The discovery of M136279841, a prime number with 41,024,320 digits. The role of Luke Durant and the GIMPS project in pushing the boundaries of prime number research. How GPUs are transforming the way we discover massive primes. The importance of prime numbers in modern cryptography and technology. The connection between Mersenne primes and perfect numbers.Links Mentioned: Join the GIMPS project and search for the next prime: www.mersenne.org/download Learn more about Mersenne primes: Mersenne Prime HistoryBecome a patron of Breaking Math for as little as a buck a monthFollow Breaking Math on Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, Website, YouTube, TikTokFollow Autumn on Twitter and InstagramFollow Gabe on Twitter.Become a guest hereemail: breakingmathpodcast@gmail.com
Details: https://billatnapier.medium.com/the-largest-prime-number-ever-found-and-the-52nd-mersenne-prime-65348546b651
What are the two reasons that 1 is not classified as a prime number? How did the definition of prime numbers evolve? What is Euclid's theorem and how does it relate to prime numbers? Explain the Twin Prime Conjecture. How do prime numbers play a crucial role in encryption methods, especially in securing digital communication? ... we explain like I'm five Thank you to the r/explainlikeimfive community and in particular the following users whose questions and comments formed the basis of this discussion: hypertinks, jamcdonald120, viskerratio, vladdy-the-impaler, frostyfingertips and functor7 To the ELI5 community that has supported us so far, thanks for all your feedback and comments. Join us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/eli5ThePodcast/ or send us an e-mail: ELI5ThePodcast@gmail.com
In this episode of Discover Daily by Perplexity, we explore groundbreaking developments in prime number theory that could reshape our understanding of mathematics and impact internet security. Mathematicians James Maynard and Larry Guth have made significant progress towards understanding the hidden structure of prime numbers, providing new insights into the famous Riemann Hypothesis. Their work improves bounds on where the nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function cannot lie, crucial for understanding prime number distribution.Meanwhile, researchers from City University of Hong Kong and North Carolina State University claim to have developed a "Periodic Table of Primes" (PTP), challenging the long-held belief that prime numbers are unpredictable. This innovative approach claims to accurately predict the occurrence of prime numbers, with potential applications in finding future primes, factoring integers, and identifying twin primes. While still awaiting peer review, this breakthrough could have far-reaching implications for cryptography and data security.These advancements in prime number theory highlight the unexpected ways abstract mathematics can impact our daily lives. From enhancing internet security to advancing quantum physics, prime numbers continue to play a crucial role in shaping our digital world and pushing the boundaries of scientific knowledge. As mathematicians inch closer to resolving long-standing conjectures like the Riemann Hypothesis, we may be on the brink of a new era in number theory and its applications.Perplexity is the fastest and most powerful way to search the web. Perplexity crawls the web and curates the most relevant and up-to-date sources (from academic papers to Reddit threads) to create the perfect response to any question or topic you're interested in. Take the world's knowledge with you anywhere. Available on iOS and Android Join our growing Discord community for the latest updates and exclusive content. Follow us on: Instagram Threads X (Twitter) YouTube Linkedin
Listen to Arturo Cantera - CoFounder at Prime Numbers (https://www.primenumbers.xyz/). In this talk, he shares his journey on How he launched his Token $PRNT About Prime Numbers Prime Numbers Labs is a truly rewarding DeFi ecosystem that combines the Prime Finance lending and borrowing protocol and the PrimePort NFT Marketplace with the Prime Numbers NFT Staking System.Enjoy an ecosystem where lending & borrowing, staking, and NFT markets all intersect for unmatched returns on your investment. At Prime Numbers Labs, the numbers are in your favor. About Foundership Foundership is a Global Web3 & AI accelerator enabling top early-stage startups with Coaching, Capital and Community. Explore our programs 0xCamp - for Early Stage Startups - Build Early Traction - Get Token Launch Ready LaunchCamp - For Growth Stage Startups - 1:1 Advisory program for Token Launch Over 40+ startups from 9 countries in the portfolio Dec 2023 50+ Capital Partner , 70+ Global Coaches , Support from Top Chains and several ecosystem partners. Blockmeet - Community Meetup, takes place every month in 35+ cities worldwide Website - https://foundershiphq.com Apply to our next Cohort - Applications are open! https://foundershiphq.com/0xCamps Follow us on Twitter - https://www.twitter.com/foundershiphq Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/company/foundershiphq Join our community Telegram - https://t.me/foundership #Bitcoin #Cryptocurrency #FoundershipHQ #Blockchain #Investment #Finance #Money #Tech #FutureofTech --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foundership/message
Would you believe…WOULD YOU BELIEVE that Erika and Paul have never talked through a Barbra Streisand movie on this show?? Incredible! It's so wild they had to call in an expert, and are joined by Tom Zohar (@TomZohar on Twitter, we will never call it that other thing, go follow him!) who has done the work on Barbra, and is here to answer all of our questions! Barbra Streisand, Lauren Bacall, Tom Zohar…what more could anyone hope for?You can follow That Aged Well on Twitter (@ThatAgedWellPod), Instagram (@ThatAgedWell), Threads (@ThatAgedWell), and Spoutible (@ThatAgedWell)! SUPPORT US ON PATREON FOR BONUS CONTENT!THAT AGED WELL MERCH!Hosts: Paul Caiola & Erika VillalbaProducer & Editor: Paul Caiola
Right now thousands of people are on a mathematical treasure hunt from the comfort of their home offices. Our own Zaron Burnett is one of them. Here's how you can join him — and compete for $50,000. *On the Very Special Episodes podcast, we tell one incredible story each week. Follow us down a different rabbit hole every Wednesday. Hosted by Dana Schwartz, Zaron Burnett, Jason EnglishWritten by Lucas ReillyProduced by Josh Fisher Editing and Sound Design by Emily MarinoffMixing and Mastering by Baheed FrazierResearch and Fact-Checking by Austin Thompson and Lucas ReillySpecial Thanks to Voice Actor Karl KeadleOriginal Music by Elise McCoyShow Logo by Lucy QuintanillaExecutive Producer is Jason English Thanks for listening! You don't owe us any favors. But if you enjoy the show and want to do us one anyway, could you head over to your favorite podcast platform(s) and leave us a rating? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Right now thousands of people are on a mathematical treasure hunt from the comfort of their home offices. Our own Zaron Burnett is one of them. Here's how you can join him — and compete for $50,000. *On the Very Special Episodes podcast, we tell one incredible story each week. Follow us down a different rabbit hole every Wednesday. Hosted by Dana Schwartz, Zaron Burnett, Jason EnglishWritten by Lucas ReillyProduced by Josh Fisher Editing and Sound Design by Emily MarinoffMixing and Mastering by Baheed FrazierResearch and Fact-Checking by Austin Thompson and Lucas ReillySpecial Thanks to Voice Actor Karl KeadleOriginal Music by Elise McCoyShow Logo by Lucy QuintanillaExecutive Producer is Jason English Thanks for listening! You don't owe us any favors. But if you enjoy the show and want to do us one anyway, could you head over to your favorite podcast platform(s) and leave us a rating? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Right now thousands of people are on a mathematical treasure hunt from the comfort of their home offices. Our own Zaron Burnett is one of them. Here's how you can join him — and compete for $50,000. *On the Very Special Episodes podcast, we tell one incredible story each week. Follow us down a different rabbit hole every Wednesday. Hosted by Dana Schwartz, Zaron Burnett, Jason EnglishWritten by Lucas ReillyProduced by Josh Fisher Editing and Sound Design by Emily MarinoffMixing and Mastering by Baheed FrazierResearch and Fact-Checking by Austin Thompson and Lucas ReillySpecial Thanks to Voice Actor Karl KeadleOriginal Music by Elise McCoyShow Logo by Lucy QuintanillaExecutive Producer is Jason English Thanks for listening! You don't owe us any favors. But if you enjoy the show and want to do us one anyway, could you head over to your favorite podcast platform(s) and leave us a rating? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Right now thousands of people are on a mathematical treasure hunt from the comfort of their home offices. Our own Zaron Burnett is one of them. Here's how you can join him — and compete for $50,000. *On the Very Special Episodes podcast, we tell one incredible story each week. Follow us down a different rabbit hole every Wednesday. Hosted by Dana Schwartz, Zaron Burnett, Jason EnglishWritten by Lucas ReillyProduced by Josh Fisher Editing and Sound Design by Emily MarinoffMixing and Mastering by Baheed FrazierResearch and Fact-Checking by Austin Thompson and Lucas ReillySpecial Thanks to Voice Actor Karl KeadleOriginal Music by Elise McCoyShow Logo by Lucy QuintanillaExecutive Producer is Jason English Thanks for listening! You don't owe us any favors. But if you enjoy the show and want to do us one anyway, could you head over to your favorite podcast platform(s) and leave us a rating? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Right now thousands of people are on a mathematical treasure hunt from the comfort of their home offices. Our own Zaron Burnett is one of them. Here's how you can join him — and compete for $50,000. *On the Very Special Episodes podcast, we tell one incredible story each week. Follow us down a different rabbit hole every Wednesday. Hosted by Dana Schwartz, Zaron Burnett, Jason EnglishWritten by Lucas ReillyProduced by Josh Fisher Editing and Sound Design by Emily MarinoffMixing and Mastering by Baheed FrazierResearch and Fact-Checking by Austin Thompson and Lucas ReillySpecial Thanks to Voice Actor Karl KeadleOriginal Music by Elise McCoyShow Logo by Lucy QuintanillaExecutive Producer is Jason English Thanks for listening! You don't owe us any favors. But if you enjoy the show and want to do us one anyway, could you head over to your favorite podcast platform(s) and leave us a rating? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode of ABR LIVE!, Brian is back and still mostly alive. Today we are diving into Moneybeer - Alec, Brian, and Chad each put together a dream 6-pack for our next Tavour crate. But just like your favorite penny-pinching MLB front office, we are working with a limited budget. On top of that we are limited to the beers that have landed at ABR LIVE! HQ via Tavour. While we reveal our crates we weigh in on a couple of heavyweight brews from Civil Society Brewing and Fair State Co-Op.Civil Society BrewingTropical Envy NEIPA16 oz - Tavour Crate10% ABVFair State Co-OpBiggie Jumbo12 oz - Tavour Crate10% ABVIf you'd like to reach out to the American Beer Review LIVE! crew to give us a beer suggestion or to tell us we suck, you can reach us on any of our socials (in order of how often we check it).You Tube - https://www.youtube.com/@americanbeerreviewInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/abeerreview/Twitter (Never gonna call it X, sorry) - https://twitter.com/abeerreviewFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/americanbeerreviewLinkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/american-beer-review-b257ab255/
Parul Kapur's novel Inside the Mirror (University of Nebraska Press, 2024) centers on twin sisters growing up in 1950s Bombay, who aspire to become artists. The family is still recovering from the Partition of India in 1947, especially the twins' grandmother, who once fought for justice against the British regime. One sister is supposed to study medicine, but she is a talented painter, and other studies education, but she is highly trained in a classical Hindu dance form called Bharata Natyam. They live in a Bengali community in which parents choose their daughters' husbands and society demands conformity. Jaya's paintings and Kamlesh's dancing could destroy their chances of finding a good husband, ruin their father's career, and affect the family's standing in their community. Jaya moves out of the house, an aberration not only affects her medical schooling, but also disturbs the bond she has with her twin. This is a beautifully written novel about family, art, British colonialism, and coming of age in a time and place in which women could not easily choose their own paths. Parul Kapur was born in Assam, India and immigrated to the United States with her family when she was seven. She received a BA in English Literature from Wesleyan University and an MFA from Columbia University. Returning to India, she worked for a year as a reporter for the city magazine Bombay, covering social issues, and culture and the arts. A journalist, literary critic and fiction writer, Parul was a press officer at the United Nations in New York and a freelance arts writer for The Wall Street Journal Europe, New York Newsday, ARTnews, and Art in America during a decade spent in Germany, France, and England. Her articles and reviews have also appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Esquire, GQ, Slate, Guernica, and Los Angeles Review of Books. Her short stories appear in Ploughshares, Pleiades, Prime Number, Midway Journal, Wascana Review, and the anthology {Ex}tinguished & {Ex}tinct. In 2010, she founded the Books page at ArtsATL, Atlanta's leading online arts review, covering the literary scene for four years. She was also a co-founder of the global voices program, showcasing a diversity of authors, at the Decatur Book Festival, formerly the nation's largest indie book festival. She created programs such as visits to collectors' homes and artist studio visits for members of the High Museum in Atlanta. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Parul Kapur's novel Inside the Mirror (University of Nebraska Press, 2024) centers on twin sisters growing up in 1950s Bombay, who aspire to become artists. The family is still recovering from the Partition of India in 1947, especially the twins' grandmother, who once fought for justice against the British regime. One sister is supposed to study medicine, but she is a talented painter, and other studies education, but she is highly trained in a classical Hindu dance form called Bharata Natyam. They live in a Bengali community in which parents choose their daughters' husbands and society demands conformity. Jaya's paintings and Kamlesh's dancing could destroy their chances of finding a good husband, ruin their father's career, and affect the family's standing in their community. Jaya moves out of the house, an aberration not only affects her medical schooling, but also disturbs the bond she has with her twin. This is a beautifully written novel about family, art, British colonialism, and coming of age in a time and place in which women could not easily choose their own paths. Parul Kapur was born in Assam, India and immigrated to the United States with her family when she was seven. She received a BA in English Literature from Wesleyan University and an MFA from Columbia University. Returning to India, she worked for a year as a reporter for the city magazine Bombay, covering social issues, and culture and the arts. A journalist, literary critic and fiction writer, Parul was a press officer at the United Nations in New York and a freelance arts writer for The Wall Street Journal Europe, New York Newsday, ARTnews, and Art in America during a decade spent in Germany, France, and England. Her articles and reviews have also appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Esquire, GQ, Slate, Guernica, and Los Angeles Review of Books. Her short stories appear in Ploughshares, Pleiades, Prime Number, Midway Journal, Wascana Review, and the anthology {Ex}tinguished & {Ex}tinct. In 2010, she founded the Books page at ArtsATL, Atlanta's leading online arts review, covering the literary scene for four years. She was also a co-founder of the global voices program, showcasing a diversity of authors, at the Decatur Book Festival, formerly the nation's largest indie book festival. She created programs such as visits to collectors' homes and artist studio visits for members of the High Museum in Atlanta. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literature
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1110, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: That'S A Rap. With Rap in quotation marks 1: Go ahead, let your hair down reading the story of this princess locked in a tower. Rapunzel. 2: To descend a steep slope by rope. rappel. 3: Any bird of prey. raptor. 4: This 212-mile river flows into Chesapeake Bay. the Rappahannock. 5: Greedy and grasping, especially for money. rapacious. Round 2. Category: I Played Her In The Movie 1: Bad singer Florence Foster Jenkins. Meryl Streep. 2: Good singer Beca, a member of the Barden Bellas who is pitch perfect. Anna Kendrick. 3: Andy Sachs, assistant to the editor of a fashion magazine. (Anne) Hathaway. 4: Jenny Curran, Forrest Gump's beloved. Robin Wright. 5: Rachel Watson, the girl on the train. Emily Blunt. Round 3. Category: Reconstruction 1: Founded at the end of Reconstruction, Nicodemus in this "Sunflower State" was the 1st Black settlement west of the Mississippi. Kansas. 2: By the end of Reconstruction, production of this "king" crop in the South was nearly equal to pre-war levels. cotton. 3: This largest Tennessee city needed its own reconstruction after 1866 race riots there. Memphis. 4: Ironically, President Johnson opposed the 14th Amendment but this state was the first former Confederate state to pass it. Tennessee. 5: In 1872 the Union general this D.C. HBCU was named for wrote about "the cosmopolitan character of the university". Howard. Round 4. Category: Birth, Art, Death 1: Born Aug. 6, 1928 in Pittsburgh,"Mao",died Feb. 22, 1987. Andy Warhol. 2: Born 1606 in the Netherlands,"The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp",died 1669. Rembrandt. 3: Born 1834 in Massachusetts,"Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 2: Thomas Carlyle", died 1903. Whistler. 4: Born 1912 in Wyoming,"Lavender Mist", died 1956 in East Hampton, New York. Pollock. 5: Born 1859 in Paris, "A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte"died 1891. (Georges) Seurat. Round 5. Category: Musical Prime Numbers 1: Prince:"2000 zero zero party over, oops, out of time, so tonight I'm gonna party like it's blank". 1999. 2: ABBA:"You are the dancing queen, young and sweet, only blank". 17. 3: Counting Crows:"In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue, in blank he came home across the deep blue sea". 1493. 4: Foreigner:"Well I'm hot blooded, check it and see, got a fever of blank". 103. 5: Blink-182:"That's about the time she walked away from me, nobody likes you when you're blank". 23. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
TECH CLUBBERS PODCAST W/ LUKE HESS Born in 1980 and raised in the Detroit area, Luke Hess has harnessed a deep appreciation for electronic music and the expression of the underground movement. His background in mathematics and engineering has given him a scientific approach to the dance floor, using frequencies, tones, and soundscapes to transform surroundings and mood. His faith based music production has landed him numerous vinyl releases ( EP's, LP's, and remixes ) on labels like Planet-e, Rekids, FXHE, Echocord, Kontra Musik, Dolly, Finale Sessions, Ornaments, and Prime Numbers among others. His debut album was released in early May 2009 by Denmark based label Echocord. In 2010 he began his own interpretation of Detroit techno with his new Detroit project and record label - DeepLabs. His sophomore album “Keep On” was released on FXHE records in 2012 and received a Recommended 4.5/5 rating on Resident Advisor. With 20 years of DJ experience, he is regarded as a perfectionist behind the decks layering his tracks in a very detailed and hypnotic manner. Luke has played at many notable venues and festivals in Europe, Asia, Australia, and North America including 10 separate appearances at the illustrious Berghain/Panoramabar in Berlin. Luke's continued hard work in the studio and as a music collector/curator combined with his unyielding interest in technology and sound will no doubt stimulate the boundaries of electronic music. Follow LUKE HESS here: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/deeplabsdetroit Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lukehess_deeplabs/ Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/deepisdeep
MICHAEL Hello and a very warm welcome to Five in the Eye. This is me - Michael Ohajuru - hosting your weekly news review show on Colourful Radio. It's episode 0439 and I can't help noticing that 439 is a PRIME NUMBER, so we know that this is going to be a special show. PHIL And this is Phil Woodford joining Michael via Zoom and revealing that our top story is going to be about immigration. Ireland recently saw street violence in the capital and the Dutch elections produced a shock with right-winger Geert Wilders getting the largest number of seats in parliament. It seems the issue isn't just a hot topic here in the UK. MICHAEL And for story number two, it's the Christmas ad for a local pub that people are saying rivals John Lewis for its sentimental message. But what does it tell us about loneliness? PHIL What's our third story this week? There have apparently been discussions about extending about the controversial VAR system in football. The suggestion has understandably sparked a mixed reaction. MICHAEL For story number four, we discuss the fact that Gen Z is apparently not so keen on the classic Christmas dinner with all the trimmings. PHIL And another food story to wrap up the show. How about some slap-up dining with… errr… Greggs? MICHAEL My favourite sausage roll is now haute cuisine! And that's this week's Five in the Eye! ++++
This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/harry_baker_a_love_poem_for_lonely_prime_numbers ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/217-academic-words-reference-from-harry-baker-a-love-poem-for-lonely-prime-numbers-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/dbdiH3qo0xQ (All Words) https://youtu.be/M0-Bo8lNHTY (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/5jUwqyGGMdo (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)
The CU/CSU game had over 9 million viewers. IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT. It's been an interesting team to follow.
Grandmaster Flash was, in fact, the DJ of the group, which makes sense, because you really just need the one.
This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/adam_spencer_why_i_fell_in_love_with_monster_prime_numbers ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/157-academic-words-reference-from-adam-spencer-why-i-fell-in-love-with-monster-prime-numbers-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/HerpjSyBwY8 (All Words) https://youtu.be/-330CyfefIs (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/Wrx-NPVTX-s (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)
Lords * CisHetKayfaber * Charlie Topics: * Umbrellas, siphons, and other physical things that seem like hacky bullshit but actually work * Articulating the shape of your internal cause-and-effect network and applying it as a learning superpower (futurevision) * I'm not sure what archipelago.gg is but if I read this paragraph aloud maybe we can figure it out together * https://archipelago.gg/ * A copypasta from this page: * https://www.followchain.org/best-copypastas/#3 * Why is a skill less valued the more we love it? Shouldn't it be the opposite? Is this arguable? Microtopics: * Supporting someone's video game dream in Denmark. * Escaping from idle games. * Video games drawing the screen as often as they can. * The pauses getting longer and longer whenever the bear needs to shit a new prime number. * The prime number shitting bear getting constipated. * How to calculate prime numbers faster. * Math stuff. * A choo choo train of thought. * Meditation apps that play ads while you're in the middle of meditating. * The thing where you put your mouth on the tube and then have to spit out the gas or you get neurological damage. * Creating a low pressure system by sucking on a tube. * Whether umbrellas make sense. * Umbrella side-drip. * How bicycles stay upright. * Does a bicycle on a treadmill stay upright? * Pattern recognition. * Seeing a situation you recognize and understanding what's going to happen. * Predicting where someone's sentence is going to end up. * Putting your water glass in a zone where it's going to get knocked over. * The shape of your mind's cause and effect network. * Seeing scenes from the future, like in Law and Order. * Predicting the future so that you can be a more efficient organism. * Mashing air molecules at you. * Speaking a language that your coworkers don't. * Applying FutureVision to your creative process. * Nonlinear creative processes. * One unique large musical story where nothing repeats. * A physical task you are doing inside your head. * The pet that is closest to having a kid. * Importing a portal gun into Tears of the Kingdom. * Finding the hookshot in Metroid and your friend then bring able to use it in Link to the Past. * How to know what your friends want. * All the bad ways an idea could be implemented * Surprise boomerangs. * Archipelago's Release System. * The era of couch co-op games. * A multiplayer season where everybody picks a different game. * Doing the oration. * Who the colored lights in your keyboard are for. * Polygonal dudes with long hair head banging in the background. * Weirdly modern music. * Fifteen years of everything else. * Rhythm games vs. music games. * Living in a society. * Devaluing the skills you love. * Listening to a song and really appreciating its use of rests. * How note lengths and rests work in tracker music. * Stopping a note without starting a new one. * Running experiments to determine exactly when a note should stop. * The micro decisions of things that people don't think about or care about. * A bird named Mabel. * A bird figuring out how to enjoy music. * A tepid delicate series of notes. * Attractivision.
Net migration to the UK rose to a record high in 2022. The ONS figures show how government policy has influenced the flows of people entering and leaving the UK. Meanwhile, the fallout from the latest inflation numbers continue to rumble through markets, with government borrowing costs hitting levels last seen around the mini-budget meltdown under Liz Truss. Our economy reporters Lucy White and Philip Aldrick join us to discuss. Plus: Kantar Public UK CEO Craig Watkins tells us what really matters to voters. Hosted by Stephen Carroll and Yuan Potts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We finally get our Rakugo power system, Iroha gets Lasik, and Denji suckers us into an emotional brick wall. 3:59 - My Hero Academia 385 20:50 - Undead Unluck 155 31:04 - Chainsaw Man 127 43:19 - Kaiju No. 8 84 47:38 - Spy x Family 78.1 50:18 - Akane-banashi 58 62:35 - Blue Box 97 73:00 - Cipher Academy 20 85:01 - Kill Blue 1 103:06 - Tenmaku Cinema 2 118:33 - Mashle: Magic and Muscles 152 123:56 - The Elusive Samurai 106 130:50 - Black Clover 357 137:55 - Favorite Series and MVP
On this episode of the MIT Press podcast, Thomas Lin, Editor-in-Chief of Quanta Magazine, discusses the research and current climate behind the science and math in Alice and Bob Meet the Wall of Fire: The Biggest Ideas in Science from Quanta and The Prime Number Conspiracy: The Biggest Ideas in Math from Quanta. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/mathematics
Episode: 2889 An important step toward solving the twin primes conjecture. Today, almost twins.
Tonight the BoomXers almost started the show without Jimmy, but never fear, Jimmy is here. Shari teaches us a little bit about Prime Numbers, Dave hates Bog Turtles but might start The Church of the Bog Turtles, Jimmy Reads, and Cindy reminds us of our Junior High Vocabulary..back when we were Rejects.
Maria Giura joins Let's Talk Memoir for a conversation about which stories define us, avoiding the self-pity trap, the importance of allowing the reader to make decisions about the characters in our memoir for themselves, how we frame childhood and family dynamics, writing about the very early versions of ourselves after we've changed so much, and what challenges she faced writing Celibate in which she explores her relationship with the priest she fell in love with and how that experience helped her discover the life she wanted to live. Also in this episode: -shutting out the voices that tell you not to share your story -gaining the perspective our narratives need -how The Church and her faith guide her Books mentioned in this episode: The Boys of My Youth by Jo Ann Beard Limbo by A. Manette Ansay The Art of Slow Writing by Louise DeSalvo Maria Giura is the author of Celibate: A Memoir, which won a First Place Independent Press Award, and What My Father Taught Me, which was a Paterson Poetry Book Prize finalist. Her writing has appeared, or is forthcoming, in several journals including New York Quarterly, Prime Number, Vita Poetica, Presence, Italian Americana, Lips, and Tiferet. An Academy of American Poets winner, Giura has taught writing at multiple universities including Binghamton University where she received her PhD in English. She currently teaches memoir workshops for Casa Belvedere Cultural Foundation. Follow her on Instagram @marigiurawrites, on Fb and at mariagiura.com Connect with Maria: Website: mariagiura.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mariagiurawrites/ Facebook:: facebook.com/maria.giura.3975/ Courses: casa-belvedere.org/product/virtual-writing-workshop-writing-your-memories-gifts-given-and-received/ Purchase Maria's book, Celibate: amazon.com/gp/product/1627202145?pf_rd_r=CQE6RA5DTDTWKAJ82YT9&pf_rd_p=edaba0ee-c2fe-4124-9f5d-b31d6b1bfbee barnesandnoble.com/w/celibate-maria-giura/1131505200?ean=9781627202145 shop.aer.io/apprenticehouse/p/Celibate_A_Memoir/9781627202145-4208?collection=/0 bookshop.org/books/celibate-a-memoir/9781627202145 – Ronit Plank is a writer, teacher, and editor whose work has been featured in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Writer's Digest, The Rumpus, American Literary Review, Hippocampus, The Iowa Review, and elsewhere. Her memoir WHEN SHE COMES BACK about the loss of her mother to the guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and their eventual reconciliation was named a 2021 Best True Crime Book by Book Riot and was a Finalist in the National Indie Excellence Awards, the Housatonic Book Awards, and the Book of the Year Awards. Her fiction and creative nonfiction have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes, the Best of the Net, and the Best Microfiction Anthology, and her short story collection HOME IS A MADE-UP PLACE won Hidden River Arts' Eludia Award. She is creative nonfiction editor at The Citron Review and lives in Seattle with her family where she is working on her next book. More about Ronit: https://ronitplank.com More about WHEN SHE COMES BACK: https://ronitplank.com/when-she-comes-back/ More about HOME IS A MADE-UP PLACE: https://ronitplank.com/home-is-a-made-up-place/ Connect with Ronit: https://www.instagram.com/ronitplank/ https://twitter.com/RonitPlank https://www.facebook.com/RonitPlank Background photo: Canva Headshot photo credit: Sarah Anne Photography Theme music: Isaac Joel, Dead Moll's Fingers
Welcome to the first episode of Season Four for the CU at the Game podcast! I am joined for the initial installment of the 2023 season by Brad Geiger and Neil Langland, and we will be discussing the finalization of the CU assistant coaching lineup, as well as a unit-by-unit review of the current CU roster. Coach Prime has his coaching staff in place for the season. Half of his assistants have followed him from Jackson State - Is that too high a total? How will the offensive and defensive schemes play out under coordinators Sean Lewis and Charles Kelly? Is it just us ... or has CU made great strides in attracting quality recruiters to the coaching staff? As to the lineup ... Buff fans are excited about every new announcement of a commitment, but now they are coming at a defined cost. CU, like every other FBS school, will need to be down to 85 scholarship players come the opening of Fall Camp, and Colorado is already in the 90s in scholarship players. With that backdrop, we review each unit on the team, and decide whether CU is “Set” at that position, or “Still Searching”, using the guideline of projecting that any new recruit may be a good - but not necessarily great - prospect, and whether the addition will offset the loss of another good player already on the team. Which units does CU have enough talent to compete at the Pac-12 level? ... And which units are still in need of significant upgrades over the next few weeks and months? ... Let's find out ...
Welcome to the first episode of Season Four for the CU at the Game podcast! I am joined for the initial installment of the 2023 season by Brad Geiger and Neil Langland, and we will be discussing the finalization of the CU assistant coaching lineup, as well as a unit-by-unit review of the current CU roster.Coach Prime has his coaching staff in place for the season. Half of his assistants have followed him from Jackson State - Is that too high a total? How will the offensive and defensive schemes play out under coordinators Sean Lewis and Charles Kelly? Is it just us ... or has CU made great strides in attracting quality recruiters to the coaching staff?As to the lineup ... Buff fans are excited about every new announcement of a commitment, but now they are coming at a defined cost. CU, like every other FBS school, will need to be down to 85 scholarship players come the opening of Fall Camp, and Colorado is already in the 90s in scholarship players.With that backdrop, we review each unit on the team, and decide whether CU is “Set” at that position, or “Still Searching”, using the guideline of projecting that any new recruit may be a good - but not necessarily great - prospect, and whether the addition will offset the loss of another good player already on the team.Which units does CU have enough talent to compete at the Pac-12 level? ... And which units are still in need of significant upgrades over the next few weeks and months?... Let's find out ...
Prime numbers are considered to be the building blocks of mathematics. Every natural number can be broken down into the constituent prime numbers that make it up. Prime numbers have been known since antiquity and they are one of the most simple aspects of mathematics to understand, yet they remain at the center of some of the most puzzling problems in mathematics. Learn more about prime numbers, what we know about them, and what we don't know, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Laura and Stephanie unpack their journey of fitness. They include the bumps and bruises and their best learning so far. In this episod of Friends Fit Forties, Laura and Stephanie unpack the benefits of the "road less traveled". They encourage you to join them on this journey.
You've seen comedian and writer Adam Conover break down important topics on his hit TV shows "Adam Ruins Everything" and "The G Word With Adam Conover," but his intellectual expertise also extends to nostalgia. On this episode of the podcast, Adam tells us about the video games he played on his graphing calculator in school, his his indie rock/funny folk music band and why he hopes no one listening to this podcast will ever hear it. We also dive deep into the educational television series Square One Television, Vanessa and Jonah reminisce about Ben Affleck's memorable role in "Voyage of the Mimi" and we trace the career traject of the vocal group Rockapella from Carmen Sandiego's house band to Folgers instant coffee fame. Finally, we play a round of YESTOLGIA OR NOSTALGIA where we debate the merits of Cinnabon-flavored cereal, the return of Taco Bell's Enchirito and the rebooted Teletubbies. If you're looking for a podcast that's entertaining as it is educational (especially when it comes to the properties of the number nine) look no further, podcast listener! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
More on iambic pentameter. Examples from Milton and Pope. A bit on sonnets. Why poetry tends to flirt with prime numbers -- five feet per line, seven pairs of rhymes in sonnets, etc. Examples from Shakespeare.
Sarah McCraw Crow is the author of the novel The Wrong Kind of Woman (MIRA Books). She is a longtime magazine writer, editor, and book reviewer, and her articles, essays, and reviews have run in BookPage, The Christian Science Monitor, Prime Number, Family Circle, Ladies' Home Journal, Parents, Parenting, American Baby, Baby Talk, and Working Mother, among others. Her short fiction has won prizes from So to Speak and Good Housekeeping, and her stories have been honored as contest finalists by Press 53, New Letters, Yemasee, and Stanford Alumni Magazine.As a child, Sarah lived in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas as her dad finished his medical training and served in the military, but she did most of her growing up in Virginia. For the past twenty years, she has called New Hampshire home. She lives with her husband and three almost-grown children on an old farm, where she gardens in the summer and snowshoes in the winter, if there's snow. And although she's a transplanted Southerner, she has come to realize that temperamentally, she's a northern New Englander.She is a graduate of Dartmouth College (AB, history), Stanford University (MA, journalism), and Vermont College of Fine Arts (MFA in writing), and she's a member of Grub Street, Boston, and the National Book Critics Circle.Learn more at https://sarahmccrawcrow.com
Jared Duker Lichtman, 26, has proved a longstanding conjecture relating prime numbers to a broad class of “primitive” sets. To his adviser, it came as a “complete shock.” Read more at quantamagazine.org. Music is “Thought Bot” by Audionautix.
Episode 102 Sarah McCraw Crow is the author of the novel The Wrong Kind of Woman (MIRA Books, October 6, 2020). She is a longtime magazine writer, editor, and book reviewer, and her articles, essays, and reviews have run in BookPage, The Christian Science Monitor, Prime Number, Family Circle, Ladies' Home Journal, Parents, Parenting, American Baby, Baby Talk, and Working Mother, among others. Her short fiction has won prizes from So to Speak and Good Housekeeping, and her stories have been honored as contest finalists by Press 53, New Letters, Yemasee, and Stanford Alumni Magazine. As a child, Sarah lived in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas as her dad finished his medical training and served in the military, but she did most of her growing up in Virginia. For the past twenty years, she has called New Hampshire home. She lives with her husband and three almost-grown children on an old farm, where she gardens in the summer and snowshoes in the winter, if there's snow. And although she's a transplanted Southerner, she has come to realize that temperamentally, she's a northern New Englander. She is a graduate of Dartmouth College (AB, history), Stanford University (MA, journalism), and Vermont College of Fine Arts (MFA in writing), and she's a member of Grub Street, Boston, and the National Book Critics Circle. VOX VOMITUS: Sometimes, it's not what goes right in the writing process, it's what goes horribly wrong. Host/Literary horror novelist Jennifer Anne Gordon with help from her co-host/author Allison Martine, chat with some of the best authors of the day. www.jenniferannegordon.com www.afictionalhubbard.com https://www.facebook.com/VoxVomituspodcast https://twitter.com/VoxVomitus #voxvomitus #voxvomituspodcast #authorswhopodcast #authors #authorlife #authorsoninstagram #authorsinterviewingauthors #livevideopodcast #livepodcast #bookstagram #liveauthorinterview #voxvomituslivevideopodcast #Jennifergordon #AllisonMartine #JenniferAnneGordon #AllisonMartineHubbard #AllisonHubbard #SarahMcCrawCrow #WrongKindofWoman --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/voxvomitus/support
We've been captivated by the striking music featured on Cheri Knight's American Rituals lately—one of our favorite songs from it opens this episode, the mantric “Prime Numbers.” Recorded in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, Knight's experimental compositions recall the minimalism of John Cage or Meredith Monk, but are shot through with a post-punk streak, all delivered with meditative, repetitive vocal abstractions that evoke her interest in Buddhism and meditation. Hailing from Western Massachusetts, where she grew up a “farm girl,” which she remains to this day, Knight's travels eventually took her away from Olympia. She joined up with an alt-country band, Blood Oranges, and after that embarked on a solo career. Cheri is a rare person who connects equally to Pauline Oliveros and Steve Earle, who we discuss in this episode. Thank you for listening to Transmissions. If you dig the show, please consider leaving a five star rating or a review. We appreciate you helping us connect with new listeners however you do so. You can listen to and subscribe to Transmissions via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Audible, and of course, the trusty RSS feed. We're a part of the Talkhouse Podcast Network. Next week on the show: Glenn Mercer of New Jersey indie rock legends The Feelies.
On today's ID the Future, philosopher of science Paul Nelson explores an intriguing tension in the thinking of famous scientist and science popularizer Carl Sagan concerning his agnosticism shading into atheism on the one hand, and on the other hand his embrace of certain ideas consistent with the theory of intelligent design. As Nelson is quick to clarify, if Sagan had lived to see the rise of the contemporary intelligent design movement, he probably would have rejected it, particularly its theistic implications. And yet, Nelson says, Sagan's thinking and arguments laid out in his Gifford lectures and in his science fiction novel Contact strongly support the idea that intelligent design can be detected. Nelson goes further, saying that if we Read More › Source
Hosts: Jim, Jon & KentThe focus of this episode is a dystopian future setting called the EarthTech Trials. Want a world with corporations controlling everything, cybernetics running rampant and popularity of web presence deciding government policy? This is it. Find it in the wiki here!00:00 Tomfoolery01:13 Introduction02:00 World Concept02:16 The Running Man03:23 The Hunger Games04:12 Orwellian04:40 Deciding the Era06:55 Dystopia / Media Influence07:12 Max Headroom07:37 Rupert Murdoch07:57 McDonnell Douglas / McDonald's08:13 Taco Bell08:30 World War Corporation / War on the Web08:56 Google / Facebook09:30 Baidu10:31 William Shatner's TekWar11:16 Nike / Squad Combat / Paintball11:39 How Things Changed11:55 One World Government13:40 Factions14:06 Marshal Josip Broz Tito16:27 Alien Threat Conspiracy19:00 Setting the Level of Devastation19:28 Earthborne Devastation19:37 The Day After Tomorrow20:29 48th Parallel21:00 World Dome22:52 Brain-Computer Interface22:57 Transhumanism23:50 Beyond the Fringe / "Civil War"24:50 Faction Locations26:51 Allegiance by Online Votes / Foursquare / +127:09 Technology27:42 Naming Factions28:32 Intel30:19 Prime Numbers31:22 Star Trek Aesthetic32:18 The Games32:23 The Olympics34:59 The World Cup35:37 Do You Like Movies About Gladiators?36:18 Mechs36:45 Apple38:18 Nikola Tesla38:30 Light Teleportation / Fiber Optics / Quantum Entanglement39:32 Solar Mirrors41:41 Corporate Structure42:26 Virtual Baronies45:22 Cult of Personality45:29 Steve Jobs46:15 Virgin Galactic49:22 Naming Media Outlets49:50 The Prime Directive50:13 Madison Avenue50:26 Important Locations51:45 Ouroboros52:22 The Phoenix52:44 Fenghuang55:30 Uluru55:52 Casablanca56:13 Tombstone, AZ56:36 Deadlands58:29 Conclusion & OutroDOWNLOAD EPISODE 2 - THE EARTHTECH TRIALS
In this episode, Matt finds his portrait in a Prime Number, Helen sings about the biggest Prime Number ever discovered (at the time of recording) and Steve discovers the hot new trick that wild honey bees are using to defend themselves:- Steve's bit (00:52)- Matt's bit (13:33)- Helen's bit (26:12)SHOW NOTES: Unfortunately our show notes are too big for Acast's margins to contain... head to the episode page to see everything.Corrections and clarifications:- None, so far.This series is sponsored by Brilliant.org, the place to learn maths and science through interactive online lessons. Start your free trial at Brilliant.org/apoud, and the first 200 Unnecessary Detail listeners who sign up for annual membership will get 20% off on the same link.For tickets to live shows, nerd merch, our mailing list and more, visit: festivalofthespokennerd.com. Want to get in touch? We're on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or email podcast@festivalofthespokennerd.com. Come for the Unnecessary Detail. Stay for the A Podcast Of. Thanks for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
James Owens reads his translation of R. M. Rilke's poem, "Soloist," and Maria Giura reads her poem, "Last Supper." James Owens's newest book is Family Portrait with Scythe (Bottom Dog Press, 2020). His poems and translations appear widely in literary journals, including recent or upcoming publications in The Christian Century, Dappled Things, and Grain. He earned an MFA at the University of Alabama and lives in a small town in northern Ontario. Maria Giura is the author of What My Father Taught Me (Bordighera Press) and Celibate: A Memoir (Apprentice House), which won the 2020 First Place Independent Press Award for Religion Nonfiction. Her writing has appeared in journals including Prime Number, Presence, (Voices) in Italian Americana, Lips, Tiferet, and the Paterson Literary Review. An Academy of American Poets winner, Maria has taught writing at multiple universities, including Binghamton, where she received her PhD in English. Learn more about her at mariagiura.com. Join the conversation! Read the Winter issue, follow us on Instagram and Facebook, and leave us a voice message here on the podcast. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vita-poetica/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vita-poetica/support